
Psychiatric News June 17, 2005
Volume 40 Number 12
© 2005 American Psychiatric Association
p. 4
Sharfstein Challenges Psychiatrists To Help Reform Health System
Mark Moran
APA's new president challenges members to "give back to their
profession" by becoming involved in advocacy work.
Psychiatry has a "crisis of credibility" and must work to
regain the public trust, said incoming APA President Steven Sharfstein, M.D.,
at the Opening Session of APA's 2005 annual meeting in Atlanta.
In a candid speech interrupted several times by applause, Sharfstein
challenged the profession to reclaim its "moral authority" and
take the lead in reforming a badly broken health and mental health care
system.
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Steven Sharfstein, M.D.: "Our advocacy must extend beyond the
doctor-patient relationship to broader issues of the public
health."
David Hathcox
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He is president and chief executive officer of Sheppard Pratt Health System
in Baltimore, Md.
Sharfstein said the organization and delivery of American health care are
beset by problems of access, cost, and qualitythe "three sides of
an iron triangle that undermines care, satisfaction, and medical
progress."
"In one corner, we hear the voice of consumers arguing that the
patient and family know best. In another corner, there are the insurers and
employers who tell us to follow the Golden Rulehe who has the gold
makes the rules.
"In a third corner, large pharmaceutical companies claim that the key
to the future is research innovation, and the key to innovation is adequate
investmentwhich requires them to charge high prices."
But Sharfstein said it is the psychiatric profession that alone can provide
access to care, manage costs, and ensure quality.
"Only doctors have the moral and intellectual authority to break this
iron triangle," Sharfstein said. "Yet, we are failing to lead. The
problem is not our policy positionsit is that our profession lacks
credibility and leverage. When we speak, too few listen. And to a large
extent, we have only ourselves to blame."
Uninsured Being Neglected
The new APA president said that psychiatry, like medicine generally, had
fallen short of its calling in vital areas.
"We do not ensure quality in our own ranks. Our system of
self-discipline is erratic, inconsistent, and also not in the public interest.
We allow an unacceptable rate of medical errors in our practice, even as we
campaign for tort reform.
"We have let the biopsychosocial model become the bio-bio-bio
model," he continued. "As a profession, we have neglected the
uninsured, the poor, the needy, and the seriously and persistently mentally
ill. As a profession, we have allowed gross disparities in health care for
racial and ethnic minorities even as we ask for better
reimbursement."
Sharfstein said as well that the profession's response to the challenge of
managed care has been erraticopting out of managed care systems
altogether on the one hand, and acquiescing to unconscionable limits on care
on the other hand.
Moreover, the for-profit, market-based system of health care has lured
physicians away from their commitment to patients and the public, he said.
"We have frequently allowed ourselves to be corrupted in this
marketplace with lucrative consulting to industry, speaker panels, boards of
directors, and visits from industry representatives bearing gifts," he
said. "We have compromised the core value of confidentiality in an
effort to guarantee payment and stay on managed care panels.
"Our profession is seen, by many, as an interest group, a trade
association, and too often we have behaved like one."
Advocacy Extended to Public Health
Outlining steps to reverse this state of affairs, Sharfstein paid special
homage to the late Jay Cutler, J.D., longtime director of APA's Division of
Government Relations and a friend of Sharfstein's.
First, he said, individual psychiatrists, and the profession, must reclaim
the role of advocate for patientsa role that Cutler exemplified during
his leadership.
"Our advocacy must extend beyond the doctor-patient relationship to
broader issues of the public health," he said. For example,
"thousands of youth are incarcerated unnecessarily each night because
community mental health services are not available. This must be psychiatry's
concern."
A second step, he said, is to create and enforce ethical standards that
would be a model for the nation and the rest of medicine. He drew special
attention to the issue of the relationship between psychiatrists and
pharmaceutical companies.
"It is my view that these relationships have been rife with the
appearance of conflict of interest and, frankly, with conflict of interest
itself," he said. "Ultimately, we must recognize that
pharmaceutical companies, as profit-seeking companies, make offers that can
and must be refused."
A third step is to defend core professional values, including
confidentiality, academic inquiry, and scientific integrity. Sharfstein
characterized as "appalling" the U.S. Patriot Act's provisions
that allow the government to see patient records while also forbidding
psychiatrists from informing a patient about the breach.
He called for defense of the core value of scientific integrity against
fringe groups and their spokespersons that have attacked the validity and
integrity of psychiatry.
Sharfstein ended his remarks by challenging APA members to get off the
sidelines and put their professional values to work through advocacy.
"If you are already shaking your head, let me console you with a
little cognitive-behavioral therapy. Just keep reminding yourself that my
term, as any presidential term, is only a year....
"But if you share my concern about our profession and its future, I
urge you to become more involved in APA. Urge your colleagues to join APA and
give back. Become active at local and national levels, and advocate.
"This is not just a goal worthy of our professionit is the
only goal worthy of our profession. Let us all `give back through
advocacy.'"
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